Journey Toward A Coherent Whole A.R. Luria gays it all in his book The Man with a Shattered World: The . History of a Brain Wound. A. Zasetsky, who is the subject of the book, states, "it's depressing, having to start all over and make sense out of a world you've lost because of injury and illness, to get these bits and pieces to add up to a coherent whole." This is especially true with brain injury, when the contrast is daunting and unrelenting. There is no time off for effort or good behavior.
My resume read quite spectacularly in my pre-accident days. At one high school won the Citizenship Award, Top Female Athlete and Top Female Swimmer prizes in various years. For senior matriculation, I won the Canadian Mathematical Congress Prize, was awarded the Weber Trophy "for academic and athletic excellence," graduated with First Class Honors (ranking first out of 115) and left with a sizeable university scholarship and a trip to the Canadian National Track and Field Championships as a javelin thrower. I kept my scholarship quite easily during my first university sojourn, despite a notion that "closing the tavern" only three times a week was slow going. As a graduation present, I treated my self to a trip to England. A friend had gone over some weeks previously and I planned to join her for a month or so. That month's holiday turned into five years of working and traveling. In my full-time employment, I started out as a temporary production line worker in various factories around London: Gordon's Gin, Holt Renfrew and Chesebrough Ponds to name a few. I advanced from production line worker to supervisor of other temporary production workers, to receptionist, to office manager. Then I switched "careers" and was a clerk-typist for a while at the Council for National Academic Awards, rising to head of the travel section. Being entrepreneurial by nature, I also had several part-time jobs at the same time: working as a bartender in two different pubs (one, the third busiest Charington's pub in London), and filling in when needed on night shifts at factories.
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